Consultancy or Body Shop?

Rob Lawrence wrote a useful field guide to help you identify whether you’re dealing with a consultancy or a body shop:
What are the differences between a consultancy and a “body shop”? No matter what your role in professional services–buyer, seller, or resource–you need to be able to understand how the two differ. Consider:

If you are […]

How to detect bullshit

Project management guru Scott Berkun has a useful essay on how to detect bullshit in the workplace:
…[L]ies, serious lies, should not be encouraged as they destroy trust, the binding force in all relationships. One particularly […]

Review: Adobe Captivate and TechSmith Camtasia Studio

Here’s a terrific, intelligent side-by-side comparison of the two most popular rapid e-learning development tools: Captivate and Camtasia.
Macromedia Captivate by Adobe and TechSmith Camtasia Studio 3.1 are similar software tools with uniquely different strong points. If you’re creating a quick-and-dirty software demo, or a PowerPoint presentation to post to a Web site, Camtasia is a […]

Consider Ubuntu

If you’re disappointed with Windows XP, scared to death of Windows Vista, and thinking about dipping your toes into the techie waters of Linux on the desktop, there’s never been a better time.
The Linux operating system — a free, open-source alternative to Windows and Mac OS X — has long served to define the gap […]

Guy Kawasaki: Everything You Wanted to Know About Getting a Job in Silicon Valley But Didn’t Know Who to Ask

Many people ask me for advice about getting a job in Silicon Valley, so here’s the inside scoop. Not everyone will agree with this advice, and some will outright deny what I’m saying, but if you use these tips you will stand head and shoulders above most candidates.
Guy Kawasaki: Everything You Wanted to Know About […]

Weighing a Switch to a Mac - New York Times

Ten years ago, if you were a Windows user, the idea of switching to a Macintosh might not have seemed enticing. An abundance of new Windows software was arriving on store shelves, while the selection available to Mac users seemed to be falling behind, often relegated to a back corner of the same store.
Today the […]

Happy Birthday, IBM PC!

The IBM PC was announced to the world on 12 August 1981, helping drive a revolution in home and office computing.
The PC came in three versions; the cheapest of which was a $1,565 home computer.
In 2006 dollars, that’s a $3500 computer, folks.
That’s enough to buy you a nicely equipped Mac Pro with Apple Cinema Display […]

Nota bene

Let me tell you about these fabulous little notebooks I’ve just found.
As a writer (one who works on technical subjects, not the Great American Novel) I make a point to never be without a notebook and a pen (a Pilot G2, please.)
For years, I used cheap spiral-bound reporter’s notebooks and went through them like Sherman […]

Tweak3D.net - Windows XP 15 Minute Tune-Up

A fine-tuned Windows XP PC can run quite fast even it’s seriously lacking in the memory and CPU department. Before you chuck out your PC to buy a new one, try stripping some of the rust that’s built-up over the years; the results may surprise you.
It’s probably your operating system that’s slow, not the PC. […]

Keeping up with the profound changes in basic arithmetic

Responsible education reformers know that throwing money at the problems of poor schools and underperforming students doesn’t work.
Sun Microsystems’ retired CEO Scott McNealy has a new idea: leverage the power of open-source tools and software to make high-quality instructional material available to the world’s students for free.
“Math hasn’t changed since Isaac Newton,” declares Scott McNealy. […]